ARTICLES ABOUT TESTIMONY BY DATE - PAGE 2

The Gideon Media Arts Conference & Film Festival has moved to Orlando for this year's event, its 6th annual conference. The Christian-themed conference runs July 12-16 at the Orlando Airport Marriott, but you don't have to participate in the conference to attend the film festival. Movies run throughout the five days. Prices are $10 per person per night - which includes two films - and can be bought at the door. Films prior to 6 p.m. are $5 per person. The Orlando Airport Marriott Hotel is at 7499 Augusta National Drive, Orlando.

SANFORD - Trayvon Martin's mother, Sybrina Fulton, listened from the witness stand as prosecutors played a now-famous recording of someone screaming for help in the background of a 911 call the night her son was killed. When attorneys had played that same recording during jury selection at George Zimmerman's murder trial, she had quietly walked out of the room. On Friday, however, she was there to identify the screams. She did not flinch, cry or lose her composure. "Who do you recognize that to be?"

SANFORD - In a phone call with a police dispatcher minutes before he shot Trayvon Martin, murder defendant George Zimmerman said off-handedly, "[Expletive] punks. " On Tuesday, that phrase became one of the most important of the trial so far. Chris Serino, the Sanford police detective who led the homicide investigation, told jurors that when Zimmerman said it, that showed the Neighborhood Watch volunteer had "ill will" toward Trayvon. Up to that point - although they had put on more than six days of testimony - prosecutors had failed to show one of the key elements they must prove to convict Zimmerman of second-degree murder: that the defendant acted with a depraved mind, hatred, malice, evil intent or ill will toward the high-school junior from Miami Gardens.

SANFORD - George Zimmerman did not say a word in court Monday, but jurors spent much of the day hearing from him as prosecutors set about trying to catch him in a what Assistant State Attorney John Guy called a "tangled web of lies. " "The truth about George Zimmerman is going to come directly from his mouth and from the lies that he told," Guy told jurors last week in his opening statement. On Monday, prosecutors played four statements Zimmerman gave to police - one a video-recorded walk-through the day after the shooting.

SANFORD — When police Sgt. Anthony Raimondo arrived at the scene, Trayvon Martin was facedown in the grass, a bullet in his chest, his hands beneath him. Prosecutors in the George Zimmerman second-degree-murder trial showed jurors a photo of Trayvon in that position Tuesday. Then they showed several more photos of his body. In one, a close-up, Trayvon's eyes are open, his face slack. His father, Tracy Martin, rushed from the courtroom after seeing the first photo. His mother, Sybrina Fulton, stayed put, but she kept her eyes down, then lifted them and looked straight ahead.

In a major victory for murder suspect George Zimmerman, a judge Saturday ruled that prosecutors may not put on the witness stand two state audio experts who say the voice heard screaming for help on a 911 call was someone other than Zimmerman. Those screams, recorded while Zimmerman was fighting with 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, are the most dramatic piece of evidence in the high-profile murder case. Zimmerman, a former Neighborhood Watch volunteer, says they came from him, that he was calling for help after Trayvon attacked him. Trayvon's parents say they are from their son and are his last words before Zimmerman shot him in the chest.

SANFORD - Two state audio experts testified Friday that it was not George Zimmerman screaming for help moments before Trayvon Martin was shot, but under cross-examination, both admitted they had doubts. "I have an opinion but it cannot be a hard and fast opinion because of the circumstances," said Alan R. Reich, a retired University of Washington voice-recognition expert. Attorneys will be back in court Saturday, when three defense experts will offer their opinions. Circuit Judge Debra Nelson must decide whether jurors should listen to any of them.

KISSIMMEE - Andrew Boudreaux received life in prison Friday for murdering his wife last year in a fit of rage. The killing devastated two close-knit Tampa families, who were in the courtroom to demand justice. Boudreaux's sister, Rachel Boudreaux Holloway, was the victim's best friend. She told the judge, "I want him to die for what he's done. " Keturah Holloway Boudreaux spent the last 10 years of her life trying to save her marriage to a sometimes violent, always selfish husband with a history of mental illness, according to testimony.

SANFORD - An FBI voice examiner who tried to identify who was screaming in the background of a 911 call seconds before Trayvon Martin was shot testified Thursday that it couldn't be done by a respectable scientist. Hirotaka Nakasone testified that he dissected the 45-second sample and found only three seconds in which the screams were not at least partially obscured by other sounds. That's too little for a proper analysis, he said. "It's not really feasible and not possible," he testified, saying he was "disturbed" that other scientists had made identifications anyway.

Amid growing protest, the city of Sanford on March 16, 2012, relented to public pressure and released dispatch recordings from the night Trayvon Martin was killed, including a 911 call that captured cries for help and the fatal shot. City leaders hoped the gesture would soothe tensions, but it had the opposite effect. It started one of the most contentious debates in the case: Who is heard crying out, Trayvon or his shooter, George Zimmerman? In a crucial hearing that starts Thursday and may drag into Friday, Circuit Judge Debra Nelson will hear from experts who say they have an answer.